Baidu Leaps into Augmented Reality with DuSee & Other Tech on 5 August 2016
It’s #ChillOutFriday @Q3Technologies! Before all the fun
& games, let’s get started with the latest digest for today!
Baidu Leaps into
Augmented Reality with DuSee
Baidu, china’s leading search engine, is constantly coming
up with new innovations & technologies for the tech industry. Now, they are
looking to leverage the power of artificial intelligence to improve China’s leading
search engine through DuSee.
“Baidu aims to provide the best and most equitable way for
people to find what they're looking for. DuSee is a natural extension of
Baidu's AI expertise. The platform uses sophisticated computer vision and deep
learning to understand and then augment a scene. The path to better AR is
through better AI," says Andrew Ng, Chief Scientist at Baidu, in Baidu’s
official press release.
Director of IDL, Yuanqing Lin explained how Baidu utilizes
the power of artificial intelligence to create smart 3D objects that have rich
interactions with the real world, "Many smartphone AR apps today work by
'pasting' a cartoon on top of the camera image, regardless of that image's
contents. The next generation of AR apps will use AI to understand the 3D
environment, and create virtual objects that have rich interactions with the user
and the real world. We are excited about future directions such as integrating
AR with speech recognition and natural language processing."
This Medical Snake
Robot can Slide into Orifices
Robot surgeries might be far from reality, considering the
fact that it is a minimally invasive surgery. But it hasn’t stopped companies
from entering this widely-unsaturated market, as you’ll find out in this next health
tech news section. We cover a lot of health tech, especially autonomous
surgeries, on this blog. But we haven’t had a chance to cover the Flex Robotic
System from Medrobotics, a surgical products company based in Raynham, Massachusetts,
which is pretty much a snake-like robot that can enter the body and move around
with great flexibility.
“The Flex Robotic System gives physicians the ability to
access anatomical locations that were previously difficult or impossible to
reach minimally invasively. And because it is affordable and efficient, [it]
allows hospitals to expand the patient population that they serve and improve
the productivity of their facilities,” the company explains on its website.
“My colleagues and I performed the world’s first
robotic-assisted cancer procedures with the Medrobotics Flex® Robotic System two
years ago. The technology has continually improved since then, allowing us
better access to challenging surgical sites. This unique, flexible system
offers a number of surgical advantages over linear robot systems that move in
straight lines. The most obvious one is it can navigate the body’s natural
curves,” says Dr. Stephan Lang, Professor of Medicine at the Department of
Otolaryngology in University Hospital, Essen.
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